Vanessa Scee

A HOMEOWNER'S STORY

Vanessa Scee

In 2015, Venessa Scee was shopping for a home in Mount Vernon. The homes she could afford needed work and the neighbors were not friendly. They were in neighborhoods that felt unsafe. She wanted something better for her son.

One of her friends had found a home through a non-profit organization, but that program required hundreds of hours of sweat equity (volunteer hours to build the home). With a young child and a busy schedule, Scee could not devote the time that the program required.

Home Trust of Skagit’s model was what she needed.

She learned about the community land trust program by stumbling onto an online advertisement. At first, Scee said she wondered if the program was a hoax “I was thinking, this has to be too good to be true,” she said. But it was true. Through Home Trust, Vanessa received down payment assistance and support to buy her home.

In February 2015, she and her son moved into their two-story, 1,700 square-foot community land trust home in the Skagit Highlands, a neighborhood on the east side of town. Her neighbors made them feel welcome, and Benny can now Trick or Treat safely in a neighborhood with hundreds of other kids.

“Maybe I don’t own the land, but it feels like it’s mine,” she says. She’s reassured by the fact that should something happen to her, she can leave the home to her son and her ground lease will be transferred to him.

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A homeless crisis of unprecedented proportions is rocking the West Coast, and its victims are being left behind by the very things that mark the region's success: soaring housing costs, rock-bottom vacancy rates and a roaring economy that waits for no one.